Identification of an avirulence gene, avrxa5, from the rice pathogen Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae , the causal agent of bacterial blight in rice, interacts with rice plants in a gene-for-gene manner. The specificity of the interaction is dictated by avirulence ( avr ) genes in the pathogen and resistance ( R ) genes in the host. To date, no avr genes that correspond...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Science China. Life sciences 2010-12, Vol.53 (12), p.1440-1449 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Xanthomonas oryzae
pv.
oryzae
, the causal agent of bacterial blight in rice, interacts with rice plants in a gene-for-gene manner. The specificity of the interaction is dictated by avirulence (
avr
) genes in the pathogen and resistance (
R
) genes in the host. To date, no
avr
genes that correspond to recessive
R
genes have been isolated. We isolated an
avrBs3/pthA
family gene,
avrxa5
, from our previously isolated clone p58, which was originally from strain JXOIII. The
avrxa5
gene converted the PXO99
A
strain from compatible to incompatible in rice cultivars containing the recessive
xa5
gene, but not in those containing the dominant
Xa5
gene. Sequencing indicated that
avrxa5
, which is highly similar to members of the
avrBs3/pthA
family, encodes a protein of 1238 amino acid residues with a conserved carboxy-terminal region containing three nuclear localization signals and a transcription activation domain. It has 19.5 34-amino-acid direct repeats, but the 13th amino acid is missing in the fifth and ninth repetitive units. Domain swapping of the repetitive regions between
avrxa5
and
avrXa7
changed the avirulence specificity of the genes in
xa5
and
Xa7
rice lines, respectively. This indicates that
avrxa5
is distinct from previously characterized
avrBs3/pthA
members. The specificity of
avrxa5
toward recessive
xa5
in rice could help us better understand the molecular mechanisms of plant-pathogen specific interactions. |
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ISSN: | 1674-7305 1869-1889 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11427-010-4109-y |